So let me get this straight. One party is running a presidential candidate who has been convicted of 34 felonies, is an adjudicated sex offender, summoned a violent mob to try to overturn a free and fair election, and has promised to be a dictator who would openly shred the Constitution, to list just a few items on his CV. And it’s the OTHER CANDIDATE who is facing cries from his party to step off the ticket?
Now, that may seem like the start to a “Stick with Biden” plea. It’s not. The pro-democracy movement in this country is in a five-alarm emergency. But it is a good starting point for a survey of an absolutely terrible week for the prospect that we will be able to keep the dark night of fascism from descending upon these United States.
IRONY DIED IN ATLANTA
There is no denying what happened on the CNN debate stage in Atlanta last Thursday night.
For many months the Republican Party has been painting an outrageous portrait of Joe Biden as doddering and infirm and not mentally sharp enough to be leader of the so-called Free World. I have long been among those dismissing that as pure propaganda. But Biden’s performance was an enormous gift to Trump and GOP, confirming their caricature of him in front of some 51 million viewers in a display far worse than even the most pessimistic Democratic strategist could have imagined.
There’s no need to rehash it here in yet another agonizing post-mortem. We’ve seen them all, and from all the most respected pundits.(But if you want to wallow, I recommend David Remnick, Mark Leibovich, Tom Nichols, Jennifer Rubin, Ronald Brownstein, Jeet Heer, Fintan O’Toole, Melissa DeRosa, Matt Yglesias, and even an institutionalist like Peter Baker.)
In an already razor-close race, it felt like a death blow. Biden had one job and he blew it, giving the worst debate performance ever in what some rightly called the most important US presidential debate ever. Personally, I have not felt that sick to my stomach since Election Night 2016. And it’s hard to imagine that the memory of that horrific performance will be forgotten. “It’s like seeing your grandma naked,” James Carville later said, with characteristic élan. “You can’t get it out of your mind.”
Like many people, I felt terrible for Biden, as honorable a man as there is in American politics, subjected to this humiliation in the twilight of his career. But in terms of its implications, I feel more terrible for the republic. The United States is in danger of collapsing into an autocratic white nationalist theocracy, and thanks to a confluence of factors, the pro-democracy forces working against that outcome have mustered a champion who is not up to the challenge.
Joe Biden is a national hero. He was probably the only Democrat who could have beaten Trump in 2020, and thank god he got the nomination. Once in office, he pulled us out of a historic pandemic that had been homicidally botched by his predecessor, revived a moribund economy and brought it roaring to life better than ever, restored sanity to US foreign policy and repaired our badly damaged reputation abroad, and enacted the most progressive and successful legislative agenda since FDR, despite outrageous Republican obstructionism and a defeated opponent who had convinced some 30 percent of the electorate that Joe wasn’t even a legitimately elected chief executive. Hats off, people.
But the cold hard fact is that we need a candidate who can beat Donald Trump, a world class grifter at the head of a fanatic fascist cult that poses an existential threat to American democracy and the stability of the whole wide world. As Mark Leibovich of the New York Times Magazine and The Atlantic has long been saying, if Biden insists on running for re-election and loses—a loss that seems more likely than ever now—he will be remembered only for his RBG-like stubbornness, and the fascist darkness that he allowed to settle over the country. And we will be complicit because we didn’t demand better.
FRANK SINATRA HAS A COLD
Setting aside Biden’s performance, David Frum made the salient point that the whole premise of the debate was a farce. Why did we let Donald Trump stand up there like he was any other legitimate candidate for the White House, and not a seditionist who had led a violent effort to overturn the last election, a crime for which he is awaiting trial, and yet has the gall to ask for his old job back? (Shades of CNN’s disgraceful Trump Town Hall last year. And I thought they’d fired Chris Licht.)
Why was the first question not, “Mr. Trump, considering what you did on January 6th, not to mention leading up to it and continuing after, why should any American trust you with the presidency a second time?”
I dunno. But it wasn’t.
After the debate the Democratic Party immediately cleaved into two camps—stay the course and dump Biden—who were at each other’s throats as bitterly as the intra-party divisions over Gaza. (Just what you want in the run-up to an election.)
When it comes to the Biden loyalist argument, there are two sub-groups.
One is naïve: “Trump is awful! And Joe is right on everything substantive!”
That is the kind of statement that begs for the reply, “Bless your heart.” In other words, it’s sweet and kind and innocent, and above all, true as the day is long….but it is also utterly irrelevant. If the issue were Trump’s personal ghastliness and horrific record versus Biden’s inherent decency and policy accomplishments over the past three years, we wouldn’t be in this mess in the first place. He would be cruising to re-election by a thirty-point margin. But reason is not in play here.
Yes, absolutely, Trump is the one who should be under pressure to step down. Yes, Biden stumbled but Trump spewed outrageous lies with the force of a firehose (“Everybody” wanted Roe overturned?) which the CNN moderators, Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, didn’t bother to challenge. But too many Americans gladly buy his snake oil, not to mention the fact that he is the head of a party of craven, power-mad bootlickers who collectively don’t have an atom of integrity among them and wouldn’t stand up to him even if he called their wives ugly and claimed their dads shot JFK.
“Anybody can have a bad night!” the stick-with-Joe camp says. Sure. But when Obama had an infamously bad debate against Romney in 2012, he was not already being relentlessly accused of suffering from dementia.
“Joe had a cold!” Please. And the dog ate my homework, and my girlfriend lives in Canada, and Tonya Harding broke her bootlace. You think that carries any weight with the voting public?
DREW BLEDSOE REDUX
Which brings us to the second “stick-with-Biden argument,” which is a pragmatic one: “There’s no realistic way to move Biden aside for another candidate, trying it would do more harm than good, and even then that mythical replacement would probably do no better.” As Joy Caspian Kang wrote in The New Yorker (in a piece called “The Case for Joe Biden Staying in the Race”), the backup quarterback is always the most popular man in town.
This is a somewhat more persuasive argument, but not necessarily correct. It’s true that there’s never been a change at the top of the ticket this late in a presidential race. But there’s never been an opposing candidate who staged a self-coup, who was a convicted felon, or who promised to be a dictator and build concentration camps either. It’s also true that there is no obvious heir, except Kamala Harris, who presents problems of her own given the racism and misogyny she already faces, as well as logistical and procedural hurdles concerning campaign finances and such. But none of those are reasons for mulishly sticking with a losing candidate, especially when the stakes are this high.
One voice calling for course-staying has been that of Rick Wilson, of the Lincoln Project, who argued that Democrats were being weak-kneed, and that Republicans would lock arms and defend Trump even if he had shat himself on live TV. He went on to ask what would have happened to Great Britain if the British people had given up at the first sign of Nazi bomber planes over that green and pleasant land in 1940.
I like and respect Rick Wilson a lot, but I think he’s dead wrong here. Sure, if Trump had explosive diarrhea onstage Republicans would still say it was the greatest debate performance in human history……but they are speaking to an audience of Kool-Aid drunk cultists. The same Jedi mind trick does not work in the reality-based world of the left, or for swing voters. To minimize the disastrousness of Joe’s performance is suicidal denialism. And for what it’s worth, the Battle of Britain analogy is flat-out wrong. No one I know is giving up the fight against Trump—on the contrary. A better analogy would be to ask: what if Britain had no RAF in 1940, only slingshots, and still thought it could beat the Luftwaffe, and opted to stick with that plan instead of upgrading at least to rifles.
And here’s the proof: The Trump campaign seems privately terrified Biden will drop out, which is why they are acting as if it’s impossible. Republicans were crowing with delight as soon as the red lights went off at the end of the debate, but they won’t be crowing if a more electable candidate takes over as the Democratic nominee. Lara Trump told Fox News that the Dems can nominate only Kamala, which is a tell that they would love that, rightly or wrongly. She went on to say that skipping to another candidate would be a violation of “the democratic process”—which is quite a statement from the people who tried to storm the Capitol in 2021.
Of all the Joe-steps-down scenarios, an abdication in favor of the Vice President might actually be the most plausible. There have even been calls for Biden to resign before the election, which would give Kamala (some) of the advantages of incumbency. Adam Serwer made a cogent case for that in The Atlantic, as did Jeannie Suk Gerson in The New Yorker, Lydia Polgreen in the New York Times, and her fellow Times columnist Jamelle Bouie. Tellingly, Clyburn, the South Carolina eminence grise who saved Joe’s nomination in 2020, tactfully told MSNBC that he would support Kamala as the nominee were Joe in fact to step down.
Will Biden be convinced to step aside, perhaps as the result of a somber, come-to-Jesus intervention by the likes of Obama, Bill and Hilary Clinton, Clyburn, Schumer, Klain, et al, not to mention Dr. Mrs. Jill, who so far seems to be very much inside the bubble? I don’t know. God knows what’s going on behind the scenes even as top Democratic leaders put up a brave front. Maybe they’re awaiting the polls, which are beginning to come in and are not good. Maybe negotiations are ongoing.
Or maybe the Democrats will just move on in hopes that the debate will have little impact and be soon forgotten, that the two sides are already calcified and it won’t matter (much), that Trump’s impending sentencing will further change the conversation, that it’s all about turnout, etc etc. That strikes me as self-deluding madness, but hey, what do I know? I do know, however, that Biden’s lack of public urgency on the matter, and his all-is-well bonhomie, is reportedly making top Democrats even more concerned, as a sign of detachment from reality.
So we shall see. But I’m worried anxious nervous scared terrified.
If Joe will not stand down, I will be by his side and do everything I can to re-elect him. But in this life-or-death crisis for the republic, we progressives and Democrats and others on the left have made our task far more difficult than it had to be by running a candidate with such liabilities, and it got exponentially harder last Thursday night.
Which brings us to the other front on which American democracy—already hanging on by its fingernails—took a baseball bat to the ribs this past week.
WITH AN ASSIST FROM THE POTOMAC SIX
Trump had a very good week not just with the debate, but because the bought-and-paid-for legal arm of his campaign—er, I mean the Supreme Court—finally handed down a pair of decisions that helped him immeasurably, both in his effort to stay out of prison, and in terms of the hell he will be able to unleash should he manage to regain the presidency.
The first was the Court’s decision in Fischer vs. United States striking down an obstruction charge used to convict hundreds of January 6th insurrectionists, and at the heart of two of the four charges Jack Smith has brought against Trump in his own J6 case. We already knew that case would not come to trial before the election, thanks in part to SCOTUS’s feet-dragging, and now, when it does, half of the charges will have been wiped away. Unless Trump is already president by that time and orders it dropped altogether.
The statue in question, 18 U.S.C. §1512(c)(2), clearly states that 20 years in prison await anyone who corruptly “obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so.” Sounds like January 6th to me. But the court twisted itself into knots to find a way to argue that that’s not really what it says. Even Amy Coney Barrett thought that was ridiculous, and dissented. (Oddly, KBJ joined the majority, temporarily trading lunchroom chairs with ACB.)
But the second and far more reaching was the Court’s decision in what election expert Richard Hasen called “the most important case in this Nation’s history,” aptly named Trump vs. United States. That case addresses The Former Guy’s absurd claim that he is a once-and-forever king who has total immunity for everything he ever did or will do.
Seems like a no-brainer, right? To say that the president is above the law defies the fundamental democratic principle on which this country was founded, as I wrote last March, in a piece called “History Will Shake Its Damn Head”:
It boggles the mind that the highest court in the land is even bothering with this ridiculous appeal, one that has been thoroughly debunked by lower courts, and the consideration of which poses vast dangers to the republic. But bothering it is….
At the time, the chief consequence of the Court granting cert seemed to be the delay it caused. Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, called it “the approach that helps Trump the most while appearing not to,” tweeting, “The Court effectively granted Trump immunity for his alleged crimes, regardless of whatever ruling they make later.”
But few observers thought the Supreme Court would actually endorse Trump’s imperial claim. One who did was the highly respected retired federal judge and conservative anti-Trump icon Michael Luttig, who back in March argued that the only plausible reason the Court took the case was because at least one or two justices (read: Clarence and Sam) believed Trump was in fact immune. Now Judge Luttig had been proven right, and the delay has turned out to be a sideshow compared to the astonishing decision itself.
The Supreme Court has said that a sitting US president has total immunity for any official acts he or she undertakes, no matter what the motive and even if for a corrupt purpose. That is a tectonic reinterpretation of the Constitution. (Originalism rocks, amirite people?)
The devil is in the “official acts” part. The SCOTUS’s right wing cabal knew it could not say "Presidents have total immunity." A sixth grader knows that's unconstitutional. So it has seized on this fig leaf, opening the door for Trump and any criminal successors (Don Jr.? Ivanka?) to claim that any given act was "official," no matter now criminal or corrupt, and therefore beyond the reach of the law, even when those acts are patently NOT official. Good news for fans of the Unitary Executive Theory!
Back in March, my friend Scott Matthews predicted that SCOTUS would rule this way, allowing Trump to claim that his actions regarding overturning the 2020 election were part of his duties as chief executive, or at least sufficiently close, placing them in an area where presidential immunity is already settled law. (That was what—hold onto your red baseball hat—the Wall Street Journal thought, too.) Of course, it’s risible that trying to overturn an election would fall under a president’s official duties, but not inconceivable that a Supreme Court with a right wing supermajority would rule that way. It wouldn’t be the first time those folks in black robes reached in and decided a presidential election.
Here's what I wrote back in March:
If the Court makes an honest assessment of Trump’s immunity argument, I’m betting on a 7-2 ruling against him, delivered at the very end of its term, in early July. But if the majority takes the coupmaking-is-an-official-act position, it could go 6-3 the other way.
So two cheers for me and my own prognosticatory skills.
In an incredible two-fer, the Court not only handed down this endorsement of monarchy, but with it also managed to create further delays in the Trump case by sending it back down to Judge Tanya Chutkan of the DC District Court to distinguish between immune and non-immune presidential conduct in this matter, which (ahem) is something else I predicted last March. So having already gifted the GOP by taking that case at all, when it could easily have let the lower court’s decision against Trump stand, and by taking as long as humanly possible to decide it, the Court’s right wing supermajority has now continued acting as an arm of the Trump campaign by kicking the case back down, creating further delay. Even Trump’s state-level conviction for electoral fraud in the Stormy Daniels case is now in question, with sentencing—which was supposed to take place next week—now pushed to September, so his lawyers can claim that the SCOTUS decision somehow applies to actions he took even before he was president. Chutzpah, thy name is Donald…..but who can blame him and his Republican allies when these batshit claims have consistently gone their way? (Look for Aileen Cannon to find a way to throw the Florida documents case out, too, even though much of what Trump is charged with was post-presidency.)
That is why Leonard Leo and the Federalist Society spent forty years getting control of the US justice system in the first place.
HAIL CAESAR
The impact of the SCOTUS decision on Trump’s January 6th case and other legal troubles is one thing. But the implications for a corrupt president in terms of the havoc he can wreak in office are far more chilling.
Writing in The American Prospect, Robert Kuttner called the decision “an invitation to dictatorship,” noting that “Had the Supreme Court ruled similarly on Richard Nixon’s claims of being above the law, Nixon never would have been forced from office.” Kuttner also called it another cost of Trump’s having been allowed to name three justices, writing, “The Court is now a corrupted institution and a shameless enabler of a corrupt president.”
I quibble only with the word “now.”
In her dissenting opinion—joined by Kagan and Jackson, which pointedly did not include the adjective “respectfully— Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote: “The President of the United States is the most powerful person in the country, and possibly the world. When he uses his official powers in any way, under the majority’s reasoning, he now will be insulated from criminal prosecution.”
Here’s the legal scholar Kim Wehle, in The Bulwark:
We don’t need to imagine the threats that Sotomayor is foreshadowing here. We lived through a president who acted with the mindset of a tyrant, one who stoked a bloody insurrection after other machinations to steal an election failed. At the end, even the Republicans who had tired of Trump were making the case that the legal system would serve as a check on him.
Now, that guardrail has been significantly diminished. And the American people will be left to rely on the delusional belief that future presidents will choose to act in good faith with their own conscience as a guide rather than abuse the virtually unlimited power the radical majority just gave them.
Republicans, naturally, praised the decision, scoffing at the risks. Speaker of the House Mike Johnsonactually said with a straight face: "No one who is elected (president) is going to be prone to this kind of crazy criminal activity. What the court is saying here follows common sense and, of course, our Constitution as well."
(Pause to take in crippling irony.)
The obvious question is: Would the Court or its right wing amen corner give Biden the same immunity? Of course not.
It did not take long for progressives to seize on that idea by suggesting—in jest—that Biden should just order SEAL Team Six to assassinate Trump, since the Supreme Court had just ruled that that was totally kosher. Less tongue in cheek, some called for Biden to test the limits of this eyepopping expansion of executive power he has been given, say, by appointing ten new Supreme Court justices (we control the Senate, right?) and daring the GOP to stop him.
Or hell, he could just call the election off altogether, right?
For his part, Trump doesn’t need SEAL Team Six when he’s got six toadies on the highest court in the land happy to do his bidding and kneecap his political opponents and shield him from criminal accountability for his actions.
The Court—painstakingly bought and controlled by the American right—is shameless in abetting the march of fascism. And why wouldn’t it? A third of the justices owe their jobs to Trump, and two others who pre-dated him are even more radically in his camp. The sixth, John Roberts, seems to flatter himself to believe he’s a moderate and an honest broker (“Balls and strikes!”) while consistently bowing to the wishes of his archconservative fellow travelers, making him either a coward or so deep in his own self-delusion that he’s feckless.
If Trump regains the presidency, the Supreme Court has already given him the “steal home” sign to do whatever the fuck he wants, secure in the knowledge that he will never be prosecuted. Don’t doubt for a second that he will. You think you saw criminality and corruption and neo-fascism in his first term? The second will make that look like a garden party.
Adam Serwer in The Atlantic:
If Trump wins, he will have the presidency Nixon wanted, one in which nothing the president does is illegal. Kevin Roberts, the president of the Heritage Foundation, which aspires to staff a future Trump administration, has made clear that the MAGA right contemplates using this newfound imperial power to employ political violence against its opposition. “We are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be,” Roberts told the far-right network Real America News. Trump’s supporters seem less to wish to govern than to rule indefinitely by force, and they believe that the Court has given them its blessing.
Eight years ago this month, the joke around Great Britain was that England just had its worst week since 1066, with the Brexit vote and a loss to Iceland (Iceland!) in the 2016 Euros. Someday we may look back on this week as the worst one America’s had since….well, the week of November 8, 2016.
KICK SAVE AND A BEAUT
Earlier this spring, Bill Kristol wrote in The Bulwark that we should not expect the courts to save us from Trump, any more than Bob Mueller or the House J6 Committee did, let alone the Senate in his two impeachments. Only we can save ourselves. “After all,” he wrote, “here the people rule.”
For now.
But we are not asking the courts to “save” us. We are simply asking them to apply the law fairly, and not act as Trump’s personal law firm.
As I wrote last March, “Maybe Kristol is right. Maybe even if all the trials are delayed, Biden will beat Trump anyway….But the ‘system’ is sure giving Donald every possible advantage to avoid that fate.”
And that is why Biden’s disastrous debate performance is so worrying. The Supreme Court has again helped Trump’s re-election prospects, and on top of that, laid the groundwork for a horrific far-right wing autocracy should he win. Are we going to throw up our hands and let that happen?
I don’t know the right path forward re the election, and smarter people than me presumably are at work on that even as we speak. But I do know that we appear to be on the verge of allowing an entirely preventable tragedy to unfold out of sheer incompetence, inertia, and unwillingness to get up and do what needs to be done.
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Photo: Six key members of the Trump campaign, Legal Division.
I don't think you need to worry so much about Biden's debate performance. It will soon be forgotten and will have little effect on the vote.